| bio | website | build47.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | California | |
| age | 35 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Mar 26 at 23:32 | |
| stats | profile views | 36 |
Software engineer. Experience with Java, Ruby, and Javascript. Some experience with PHP, Python, and Scala.
We're not code monkeys. We're engineers!
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Mar 25 |
comment |
Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? @RobertHarvey But JFGI doesn't always solve the situation. There are many good learning aids that are buried on the internet and a site like SO can help bring those good links to the forefront. dmckee made a valid point but it seems there should be a middle ground? Maybe an entirely new feature of the site, a wiki without Q&A but equally good for learning? |
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Mar 25 |
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Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? @Bart That's excellent news. I hope there will also be tools to edit the closed reason. |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Citizen Patrol |
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Mar 25 |
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Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? @Bart I wasn't clear. The reason for closing should maybe be more specific: "Subjective question" with more specific links to info about subjective questions (and the FAQ too). |
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Mar 25 |
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Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? Agreed but as the non-power user, I found it difficult to find how to fix the question. The FAQ was large and general and those useful links you posted were not at my finger tips. In the end @dmckee pointed out that these types of questions were tried and failed. I think my only suggestion now is to have a new category for "subjective" with a link to the information on subjective questions. Then people can read directly why the question doesn't work and not the general category of "not constructive." |
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Mar 25 |
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Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? @dmckee That was the best answer I've read all day. It was not rude. It gave me some history/clarification and why they don't work. And you did it succinctly. |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Mar 25 |
accepted | Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? |
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Mar 25 |
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Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? What spawned this whole thing was stackoverflow.com/questions/10375384/… – I looked for ways to improve it. The FAQ is huge and a little overwhelming. I looked at the comments, no real guidance. Then I gave up. Saw about 3 more like this and became frustrated. |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Editor |
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Mar 25 |
awarded | Peer Pressure |
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Mar 25 |
revised |
Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? added 69 characters in body; edited title |
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Mar 25 |
asked | Should moderators (or other role) assist users change bad subjective questions into good subjective questions? |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Self-Learner |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Jun 18 |
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Tracking the questions you've recently viewed or visited This would be much like Google's search history, which I find very useful on occasions where I forgot to bookmark a link. |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Nice Question |